Matthew Barnes <mbar...@redhat.com> wrote:
>I'm still a little confused as to why so many users seem to feel the
>need to backup and restore their personal data just to upgrade their
>operating system in place.  Backing up of course is a prudent safety
>measure, but if the upgrade goes smoothly there should be no need to
>restore the backup.
>Are there actually distro installers that don't allow you to upgrade
>without nuking your home directory, or do some installers not make that
>option clear enough, or am I just misunderstanding the problem?


AFAIK all mainstream distros do non-destructive in-place upgrades.  I've 
upgraded openSUSE from 11.0 to present (12.1) without restoring anything.


I think this stems from a clinging to the obsolete practice of periodic 
re-install.  I have no idea why users do this but it is very prevalent amoung 
the ones I talk to;  they reinstall all the time.


>There does seem to be a large concentration of Ubuntu users reporting
>these kinds of problems, but that might just be a statistical anomaly
>rather than something Ubuntu is doing wrong.


I don't believe it is anomalous;  it jives perfectly with my first-hand 
experience.    Ubuntu users in-the-main inherit the worst practices of 1990s 
era PC users.  It is very frustrating to try to help them even in person - turn 
your back for a few minutes and the are reinstalling to see if that will 
magickally fix thier problem (whatever that is).
-- 
Adam Tauno Williams
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